, :>J 4: : > /g::, >a: , , ..x / " :, ,,'::":'; <ð *" ":;: ;; . : , :;: ;: , :'. .,, " " , , ,; > : i > ."<-: Ai : . , v<> 12 ark. No faker turned that out. \Ve knew it when we read the first couplet: J4'ido, look! A bright idea! A tall, cool glass of Hoffman's Beer. . I NCIDENTAL INTELLIGENCE: .l\. well- bred young Dalmatian has just been registered with the American Kennel Club under the name of Hooker of !)ewars. The Brevoort Pharmacy, on Eighth Street, has removed its soda fountain in order to enlarge the pharmacy de- partmen t. In a corner of the Manhattan Telephone Directory, THWEATT and TH\VING are thide by thide. The Massapequa, Long Island, fire- house has a private telephone number. Full Circle A SM.i\.LL boy in a progressive school surprised his parents the other day with the news that he had written a play for the next school assem- . ::::+ his comparative obscurity doesn't bother him at all. "I have no further ambi- tions," he assured us. The unchaperoned appearance of Matuszczak on any college campus would cause cheers and jubilation among the modern, press-gang type of coaching staff. He weighs 204 pounds and even in his unpadaled street clothes looks like a block of granite we once knew in Ver- Iliont. He is one of the Lowville, New York, Matuszczaks, a Polish dairy- farming family which includes seven boys and three girls. Walter is the youngest. None of his brothers went to college and most of them preferred to take advantage of their father's patri- archal system of dividing up his farm, which is (or was) large, as the boys be- came able to take over on their own. \Valter got to Cornell, which is 160 miles to the southwest of Lowville, be- cause he had acquired a kindly feeling for the livestock around his father's farm and decided to learn more about animals at the Cornell Veterinary College. He's got two more years to go in his vet course, and in tends to set up in general prac- tice after he finishes. At the moment he is study- ing the nervous system of the horse. 11atuszczak learned elementary football at high school in Low- ville, where he also played on the hasketbal] and baseball teams and on the alto horn in the band. At Cornell, he has stuck closely to foot- ball. His teammates are convinced that he can do no wrong and a great deal of right. - s evidence, they cited to us his block of a safety 111an on a touchdown play against Ohio State and his success in find- ing the weak spot in the Ohio line after a brief experiment in trial and error. In a huddle, his teammates told us, there is no disputing his decisions and orders. He has, however, been known to ask advice of his fellow-backs. It has been charged by cer- tain powers of darkness that Carl Snavely, the Cornell coach, is wont bly, and was furthermore going to play several leading rôles in it. The play, as he eXplained it, was sort of a saga of America. "In the first act I'm an In- dian," he said, "and in the second I'm "\Vendell Willkie." "And are you any- thing in the third act?" his mother asked. "Oh, yes," her son said. "In the third act I'm an Indian again." Quarterback T HE Cornell players, who Iliany Easterners claim positively com- pI ise the best football team in the coun- try, stopped off in N ew York on their way home from Yale and We went over to their hotel, the Governor Clinton, to get a look, close up, of the captain and quarterback, Walter Matuszczak ( 11a toó shak). He almost never handles the ball except to relay it to another play- er, his duties on the offensive being most- ly calling signals and blocking, and con- sequently he isn't as spectacular as some players of the season, but he's one of the lTIOst important ones. He told us that , ' 'tl:[ \ .. .:: 1i:: ,,: : i,t: , f:: j:: i,; ..'"',,, -""' " ::::,:,;"" .",:,:::>'"."..", h . " ..:,:.;.:.-',..;,::\ :./..::.:.:...... \ill, .,.,.1,. .::':':': ::.:.::: ' , ...,:,'J.':""",'," , "',; ,'w " ," " ' :""'; ," >é;J ;á) :kt;:", ; ",:, "';,' ,'.' :it: n,,:,..,)J 'þ.' : ;:[ti; ;: Î[:!<f':: : \ t ;::: :: , .. - ""iW:' 'm: ... j ,:4 ;j' : .::. -:o:;.: to:: . . .::; .::: :.. <<.:.: , : , r$\;;; .. "., .;.þf ;; , " ';;-'" "There's no doubt about it-business simply isn't borrowing money these days."